Enabling Harm, Doing Harm, and Undoing One’s Own Behavior

Ethics 126 (1):68-90 (2015)
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Abstract

Philosophers disagree about the moral status of harm-enabling, or behavior by which an agent removes an obstacle to the completion of a threatening sequence. I argue that enabling harm is equivalent to doing harm, at least when an agent withdraws a resource to which neither she nor the victim has any prior moral claim. This conclusion reinforces the common objection that deontological appeals to the doing/allowing distinction cannot easily handle cases involving the withdrawal of aid. I argue that the existing literature on this issue overlooks a more fundamental problem concerning the moral relevance of an agent’s past behavior

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Jason Hanna
Northern Illinois University

Citations of this work

Self-Defense.Helen Frowe & Jonathan Parry - 2021 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2021.
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